Journal of the History of Ideas, Volume 18Johns Hopkins University Press, 1957 - Electronic journals A journal of cultural and intellectual history. Examines the evolution of ideas and their influence on historical developments. Includes history of philosophy, literature, the natural and social sciences, religion, and culture in general. |
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Page 85
... doctrine . These are things that require to be understood . If one is to understand how a single day's fighting at Zama in 204 B.C. ended a twenty - year long struggle and left Rome without an effective competitor for the control of the ...
... doctrine . These are things that require to be understood . If one is to understand how a single day's fighting at Zama in 204 B.C. ended a twenty - year long struggle and left Rome without an effective competitor for the control of the ...
Page 104
... doctrine that the object proper to religious devotion is a rational social order . This order was regarded as the goal of an historical process , the educa- tion or perfection of mankind . Theology arrived at this conclusion , first ...
... doctrine that the object proper to religious devotion is a rational social order . This order was regarded as the goal of an historical process , the educa- tion or perfection of mankind . Theology arrived at this conclusion , first ...
Page 358
The doctrine of epigenesis , i.e. , that organisms developed by the successive differentiation of the fertilized ovum , was the dominant and orthodox theory of generation from the time of Aristotle . How- ever , with the discovery of ...
The doctrine of epigenesis , i.e. , that organisms developed by the successive differentiation of the fertilized ovum , was the dominant and orthodox theory of generation from the time of Aristotle . How- ever , with the discovery of ...
Contents
The Double Martyrdom of Randolph Bourne | 4 |
T H Huxleys Treatment of Nature | 112 |
COPYRIGHT 1957 JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF IDEAS | 146 |
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Agrippa argument Aristotle Bacon Baxter believe Berkeley body Boulainvilliers Bourne Bradlaugh Calvinists Cassirer cause Charles Bradlaugh Christian civil Cohen concept constitution criticism Darwin Davidson Descartes discussion divine divisibility doctrine Dutch edition eighteenth century ence English essay ethics evidence existence experience fact France French German liberals historian human Huxley hypothesis Ibid ideas induction infinite divisibility intellectual John John Davidson Keill knowledge law of nature Lectures legal maxim Leibniz letter logic London mathematical matter maxims means mechanical philosophy ment method mind moral Morris Raphael Cohen motion natural philosophy Newton Nietzsche objects observation Paris Paul Rabaut Peirce phenomena physical political principles problem properties proposition Randolph Bourne reason reference religion religious scientific sense sGravesande Sidereus nuncius social soul species Spedding spirit theory things thought tion translation truth University usury Voltaire Whewell writings York